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Timeline of BBC Local Radio
This is a timeline of
BBC Local Radio
.
1960s
1962
27 June – The
Pilkington Committee on Broadcasting
publishes its report and recommends that the BBC should extend its activities to the creation of local radio stations in order to prevent the introduction of commercial radio.
The BBC runs a series of closed circuit experiments in local radio from a variety of locations across England.
[1]
1966
A government White Paper paves the way for the launch of a small number (eight) of two-year experimental
BBC Local Radio
stations.
[1]
1967
8 November – At 12:45pm,
BBC Local Radio
launches when the first station,
BBC Radio Leicester
, starts broadcasting.
15 November –
BBC Radio Sheffield
launches.
22 November –
BBC Radio Merseyside
launches.
1968
31 January –
BBC Radio Nottingham
launches and four days later the station hosts the UK's first ever radio phone-in.
[2]
14 February –
BBC Radio Brighton
launches.
14 March –
BBC Radio Stoke
launches.
24 June –
BBC Radio Leeds
launches.
3 July –
BBC Radio Durham
launches.
1969
10 July – The BBC publishes a report called "Broadcasting in the Seventies" proposing replacing regional broadcasting on
BBC Radio 4
with
BBC Local Radio
.
BBC Local Radio
is made permanent after the two-year experiment is judged to have been a success.
1970s
1970
4 September –
BBC Radio Bristol
launches.
10 September –
BBC Radio Manchester
launches.
6 October –
BBC Radio London
launches.
29 October –
BBC Radio Oxford
launches.
9 November –
BBC Radio Birmingham
launches.
18 December –
BBC Radio Medway
launches.
31 December –
BBC Radio Solent
and
BBC Radio Teesside
launch.
1971
2 January –
BBC Radio Newcastle
launches.
26 January –
BBC Radio Blackburn
launches.
25 February –
BBC Radio Humberside
launches.
29 April –
BBC Radio Derby
launches.
1972
25 August – When the government restricted the BBC to twenty local radio stations, the corporation responds by closing
BBC Radio Durham
. Its resources are transferred to
Carlisle
where BBC Radio Carlisle, now
BBC Radio Cumbria
, is formed.
1973
8 October –
BBC Local Radio
faces competition for the first time when the UK's first
Independent Local Radio
station,
LBC
, launches.
24 November –
BBC Radio Carlisle
launches.
1974
1 April – Following the formation of the county of
Cleveland
,
BBC Radio Teesside
is renamed BBC Radio Cleveland.
1975
No events.
1976
No events.
1977
No events.
1978
No events.
1979
No events.
1980s
1980
Summer – Due to the continued expansion of
BBC Local Radio
, regional news and opt-out programming on
BBC Radio 4
ends, apart from in the south west as this is now the only part of England still without any BBC local station.
11 September –
BBC Radio Norfolk
launches.
11 November –
BBC Radio Lincolnshire
launches.
1981
4 July –
BBC Radio Blackburn
expands to cover all of
Lancashire
and is renamed accordingly.
23 November – BBC Radio Birmingham expands to cover the
West Midlands
,
South Staffordshire
, north
Worcestershire
and
north Warwickshire
and is relaunched as
BBC WM
.
1982
15 and 16 March –
BBC Local Radio
starts broadcasting to the
Channel Islands
when
BBC Radio Guernsey
and
BBC Radio Jersey
launch.
1 May –
BBC Radio Cambridgeshire
launches.
25 May –
BBC Radio Carlisle
expands to cover all of
Cumbria
and is renamed accordingly and as part of the expansion,
BBC Radio Furness
launches as an opt-out service for the south of the county.
30–31 May –
BBC Radio York
is given permission to provide a temporary service to cover
Pope John Paul II
's visit to
York
.
[3]
The service, which runs for just over 24 hours, operates on what will become BBC Radio York's MW frequency when the station launches next year.
16 June –
BBC Radio Northampton
launches.
31 December – The final
BBC Radio 4
regional opt-out ends when the final edition of
Morning Sou'West
is broadcast, ahead of the launches of
BBC Radio Devon
and
BBC Radio Cornwall
.
1983
17 January –
BBC Radio Devon
and
BBC Radio Cornwall
launch.
2 July –
BBC Radio Medway
is expanded to cover all of the county of
Kent
and is renamed accordingly.
4 July –
BBC Radio York
launches on a permanent basis.
22 October –
BBC Radio Brighton
is expanded to cover all of the county of Sussex and is renamed accordingly.
1984
The BBC conducts five trials of citywide community stations in
Greater Manchester
. Each trial lasts for a few weeks and was on air for a few hours each day, opting out of
BBC Radio Manchester
. The experiment has not been repeated.
1985
23 April –
BBC Radio Shropshire
launches.
24 June –
BBC Radio Bedfordshire
launches.
1986
25 August – An early evening service of specialist music programmes launches on the BBC's four local radio stations in Yorkshire. The programmes are broadcast on weeknights between 6pm and 7.30pm.
5 November –
BBC Essex
launches.
1987
September – The service of specialist music programmes broadcast on the BBC's four local stations in Yorkshire is expanded. Programmes are broadcast on six nights a week (Wednesday to Monday) and the length of each programme is increased by 30 minutes. Consequently, the four stations now stay on air into the mid evening as the programmes are transmitted between 7pm and 9pm.
1988
11 April –
BBC Somerset Sound
launches as an opt-out station from
BBC Radio Bristol
. It broadcasts on BBC Radio Bristol's former MW frequency of 1323AM.
20 September – The
Radio Data System
(RDS) launches, allowing car radios to automatically retune, display station identifiers and switch to local travel news.
3 October –
BBC Radio Gloucestershire
launches.
7 October – At 7pm, BBC Radio London closes and instead of handing over to Radio 2, the frequency immediately begins broadcasting test transmissions in preparation for the launch of its replacement, Greater London Radio (GLR).
25 October – At 6.30am, BBC GLR launches.
29 October –
Network North West
launches, providing a nightly service of programmes from 7.30pm until midnight. Network North West is broadcast on the BBC's four north west stations.
30 October – BBC GMR replaces
BBC Radio Manchester
.
By the end of 1988, regular evening programming on weeknights has launched in some areas. The programming is mostly regional rather than local with the same programme networked on all the stations in that area. Consequently, stations are now starting to provide local/regional programming on weeknights until midnight. Previously stations had ended local programming by mid-evening, handing over to
BBC Radio 2
until the following morning.
1989
14 February –
BBC Hereford and Worcester
launches.
4 March –
BBC Wiltshire Sound
launches.
WM Heartlands
launches as a mid-morning experimental opt-out from BBC WM. It serves the 'Heartlands' area of East Birmingham using the 1458MW frequency.
[4]
29 May – The
BBC Night Network
launches on the BBC's six local radio stations in Yorkshire and north east England. The service broadcasts seven nights a week from 6:05pm (6pm at the weekend) until 12midnight. Any local programming, including programming for minority communities, is broadcast on MW only with Night Network continuing on FM.
The Asian Network
launches as a 70 hours-a-week service on the MW transmitters of
BBC Radio Leicester
and
BBC WM
.
1990s
1990
17 January –
BBC CWR
launches.
12 April –
BBC Radio Suffolk
launches.
BBC Radio Northampton
is renamed BBC Northampton.
1991
Spring – The
BBC Night Network
is expanded to incorporate the BBC's four north west stations. Programmes now start at 7:05pm (7pm at the weekend).
14 November –
BBC Radio Surrey
launches.
BBC Radio Shropshire
stops broadcasting on MW.
WM Heartlands
closes.
[4]
BBC Radio Furness
loses its separate branding but programme opt-outs for the South Lakes and Furness at breakfast and during the afternoon continue.
1992
21 February –
BBC Radio Berkshire
launches, initially as a sister station of
Radio Oxford
, broadcasting for part of the weekday and weekend mornings.
17 April –
BBC Radio Nottingham
ends transmissions on one of its MW transmitters.
BBC Radio Cleveland
,
BBC Radio Northampton
and
BBC Radio Oxford
also stop broadcasting on MW in 1992.
[5]
The
BBC World Service
is now broadcast when stations are not on the air. Previously,
BBC Radio 2
had been heard during station downtime.
1993
5 April – BBC Radio Bedfordshire expands to cover the counties of
Buckinghamshire
and
Hertfordshire
and is renamed
BBC Three Counties Radio
.
26 April –
BBC Dorset FM
launches as an opt-out service from
BBC Radio Devon
.
Autumn –
BBC GLR
[6]
and
BBC GMR
stop broadcasting on MW. Their frequencies are reallocated to commercial radio.
1994
7 January –
BBC Radio Sussex
and
BBC Radio Surrey
are merged as BBC Radio Sussex and Surrey, although the station had carried this name since the previous September.
18 March –
BBC Radio Kent
stops broadcasting on 1035 kHz MW. The frequency is reallocated to commercial radio.
1 August –
BBC Southern Counties Radio
launches as the first
BBC Local Radio
station to adopt an all-speech format. It replaces BBC Radio Sussex and Surrey.
The
Furness
opt-outs for southern Cumbria effectively end after 12 years as a result of cutbacks at the BBC.
1995
May –
BBC CWR
closes as a stand-alone station and becomes an opt-out of
BBC Radio WM
.
1996
March –
BBC Dorset FM
closes and is replaced by a rebroadcast of
BBC Radio Solent
with localised news bulletins.
9 April –
BBC Radio Oxford
and
BBC Radio Berkshire
merge to form
BBC Thames Valley FM
.
4 November – The Asian Network expands into a full-time station when it increases the number of hours on air from 80 hours a week to 126 hours a week (18 hours a day). The station, which broadcasts on the MW frequencies of
BBC Radio Leicester
and
BBC WM
, is renamed
BBC Asian Network
. Consequently, Radios Leicester and WM become available only on FM.
1997
1 September –
BBC Southern Counties Radio
is relaunched. The all-speech format is dropped and the station reverts to a more traditional mix of music and speech.
For a brief period in 1997,
BBC GMR
is renamed GMR Talk.
1998
BBC Radio 5 Live
replaces the
BBC World Service
as
BBC Local Radio
's overnight downtime filler.
1999
No events.
2000s
2000
14 February –
BBC Thames Valley FM
closes and
BBC Radio Oxford
and
BBC Radio Berkshire
relaunch as separate stations although Radio Berkshire operates as an opt-out service of Radio Oxford.
25 March – BBC GLR closes and is relaunched as
BBC London Live 94.9
.
3 April – BBC Northampton reverts to its original name of
BBC Radio Northampton
.
2001
1 October –
BBC London Live
changes its name to BBC London 94.9.
BBC London 94.9 becomes the first BBC local station to begin live streaming on the internet.
October –
BBC Three Counties Radio
launches opt-out programming for the county of
Buckinghamshire
.
2002
11 November –
BBC Radio Swindon
launches as an opt-out service from Wiltshire Sound which is renamed
BBC Radio Wiltshire
.
2003
No events.
2004
No events.
2005
3 September –
BBC Coventry & Warwickshire
returns as a stand-alone station after ten years of operating as an opt-out from
BBC WM
.
late 2005 – The switching on of new transmitters at Epping Green and
Bedmond
extend
BBC Three Counties Radio
's coverage area to
Welwyn Garden City
,
Hatfield
and west Hertfordshire.
2006
3 April – BBC GMR changes its name back to
BBC Radio Manchester
.
2007
BBC Local Radio introduces
BBC Introducing
to support local grassroots music.
[7]
11 August – BBC Radio Cleveland is rebranded as
BBC Tees
due to its broadcasting area no longer being associated with the name Cleveland.
3 December – BBC Somerset Sound is rebranded as
BBC Somerset
and becomes available on FM for the first time.
[8]
2008
No events.
2009
30 March –
BBC Southern Counties Radio
closes resulting in the return of
BBC Surrey
and
BBC Sussex
as stand-alone separate stations.
4 April –
BBC Radio Swindon
, which had opted out of BBC Radio Wiltshire, is closed. The two stations are merged as
BBC Wiltshire
.
October – As part of a drive to create a more unified sound for BBC Local Radio, a generic
jingle
package produced by Mcasso Music Production begins to be gradually rolled out across the network.
2010s
2010
No events.
2011
No events.
2012
April – All BBC local stations are now using the Mcasso Music Production jingle package.
May –
BBC Somerset
launches as a full-time station.
17 August – A five-week trial to find out if listeners will miss or complain about the lack of AM services begins when
BBC Radio Kent
,
BBC Radio Lincolnshire
,
BBC Radio Merseyside
and
BBC Radio Nottingham
stop broadcasting regular programmes on medium wave.
[9]
2 October – The BBC decides that BBC Radio Nottingham's MW transmitter and Radio Kent's relay at Rusthall near
Tunbridge Wells
, will remain off-air after the BBC says that the trial switch-off attracted very few complaints from listeners.
[10]
2013
5 January – The
BBC Local Radio
stations begin a new Saturday evening show titled
BBC Introducing
. Hosted by a local presenter on each station, the programme's aim is to promote musicians from the area.
[11]
7 January – The debut of the BBC's networked evening programme takes place, hosted by former
Classic FM
presenter Mark Forrest.
[12]
The show replaces all local programming, apart from local sport coverage.
8 July – After eight years,
BBC Local Radio
returns to
Dorset
when a breakfast show for the county, as an opt-out from
BBC Radio Solent
, is launched.
2014
No events.
2015
3 March – Several BBC local radio stations are launched on
Freeview
, with ten of the 40 local stations in England now broadcasting on the platform. They can be found on channels 719 to 722.
[13]
6 October – After 27 years, the name
BBC Radio London
returns to the airwaves following a name change from BBC London 94.9.
2016
19 February –
BBC Radio Bristol
stops broadcasting on MW following the sale of the land, on which the transmitter was located, to developers.
21 June – The BBC completes its roll-out of BBC Local Radio on
Freeview
.
[14]
2017
8 October – In a speech marking the 50th anniversary of local radio, The
Director-General of the BBC
,
Tony Hall
, announces that the national evening show will be axed, resulting in local programming returning to weeknight evenings.
[15]
2018
15 January – The MW transmissions of BBC Radios Sussex, Surrey, Humberside, Wiltshire, Nottingham, Kent and Lincolnshire end and MW coverage for BBC Devon, Lancashire and Essex is reduced. Altogether a total of 13 MW transmitters are switched off.
[16]
[17]
[18]
Summer – BBC local stations start reintroducing local weekday evening programmes with all stations broadcasting their own evening output by the end of September.
2019
No events.
2020s
2020
6 January – The rollout of a new jingle package produced by ReelWorld Europe begins with
BBC Radio Leicester
.
[19]
15 January –
The BBC announces a further switching off of BBC Local Radio MW transmitters. The switch-offs, being done as a cost-cutting measure, will see the end of MW transmissions of Radios Cornwall, Newcastle, Merseyside, Solent, Solent for Dorset,
BBC Three Counties Radio
and
BBC Radio York
. Also
BBC Radio Cumbria
will stop broadcasting on MW in
Whitehaven
and
BBC Radio Norfolk
's
Norwich
MW transmitter will go silent. The affected transmitters will broadcast a retune advice loop prior to full switch-off in early April.
[20]
In a speech at Cardiff,
BBC Director-General
Tony Hall
confirms plans to make major changes to
BBC Local Radio
.
[21]
27 January –
BBC Tees
is rebranded as BBC Radio Tees.
24 February –
BBC Coventry & Warwickshire
reverts to the BBC CWR name.
9 March –
BBC Wiltshire
reverts to BBC Radio Wiltshire.
23 March –
BBC Newcastle
reverts to BBC Radio Newcastle.
All BBC Local Radio stations adopt a generic schedule during the
COVID-19 pandemic
and all specialist shows being taken off the air. Each station broadcasts between 6am and 1am and overnight they simulcast
BBC Radio London
following a decision to suspend overnight programmes on
BBC Radio 5 Live
so that the BBC can broadcast a single UK-wide overnight programme.
[22]
[23]
28 March – As part of the BBC's Make a Difference campaign,
BBC Local Radio
announces that it has teamed up with manufacturers, retailers and the social isolation charity
WaveLength
to give away free
DAB
radios to vulnerable people over the age of 70, beginning on 30 March.
[24]
30 March –
BBC Sussex
and
BBC Surrey
revert to BBC Radio Sussex and BBC Radio Surrey respectively.
[25]
27 April –
BBC Somerset
is rebranded as BBC Radio Somerset.
11 May –
BBC WM 95.6
reverts to BBC Radio WM.
2 July – The BBC announces that the changes that were introduced during the Coronavirus outbreak are to become permanent as part of a bid to save £25m by 2022.
[26]
6 July – BBC Local Radio stations revert to broadcasting
BBC Radio 5 Live
during most of their overnight downtime although the BBC Radio London is broadcast on all stations between 5am and 6am.
26 November –
BBC Local Radio
scraps plans to introduce a syndicated late show.
[27]
7 December –
BBC Radio Bradford
launches as a four-month temporary station, broadcasting on the MW frequency of
BBC Radio Leeds
each weekday between 6am and 2pm.
[28]
[29]
2021
15 January – Launch of
BBC Radio Wolverhampton
on DAB, a station broadcasting to Wolverhampton between 6am and 2pm.
[30]
18 January – Launch of
BBC Radio Sunderland
, on DAB, a station broadcasting to Sunderland between 6am and 2pm.
[30]
31 March – BBC Radio Bradford, BBC Radio Wolverhampton and BBC Radio Sunderland stop broadcasting.
2 April –
BBC Local Radio
launches
Squad Goals
, a non-terrestrial service providing football updates and information that airs while local stations are providing match coverage for which they only have terrestrial broadcasting rights, and that replaces a looped message telling listeners on
Freeview
,
BBC Sounds
and smart devices they are unable to listen to live football because of rights issues.
[31]
15 April – The BBC confirms that a further eight BBC Local Radio stations will switch off their mediumwave frequencies during May and June 2021. The stations that will no longer be available on AM are
BBC Essex
,
BBC Radio Cambridgeshire
,
BBC Radio Devon
,
BBC Radio Leeds
,
BBC Radio Sheffield
,
BBC Hereford & Worcester
,
BBC Radio Stoke
and
BBC Radio Lancashire
.
[32]
19 April – BBC Local Radio announces the launch of its "Make a Difference – Back to Business" initiative to support England's arts sector.
[33]
10 May –
BBC Radio Cambridgeshire
stops broadcasting on MW.
13 May –
BBC Radio Hereford & Worcester
stops broadcasting on MW.
17 May –
BBC Radio Lancashire
stops broadcasting on MW.
20 May –
BBC Essex
stops broadcasting on MW.
24 May –
BBC Radio Stoke
stops broadcasting on MW.
27 May –
BBC Radio Sheffield
stops broadcasting on MW.
1 June –
BBC Radio Leeds
stops broadcasting on MW.
7 June –
BBC Radio Gloucestershire
stops broadcasting on MW to the
Stow-on-the-Wold
area.
1 August –
BBC Radio Guernsey
and
BBC Radio Jersey
are now available on DAB+ as well as BBC Radio Guernsey Xtra and BBC Radio Jersey Xtra which is a relay of the medium wave service with coverage of the States Assembly.
[34]
3 August –
BBC Radio Devon
stops broadcasting on MW.
[35]
[36]
1 December – The switching on of local multiplexes for north Cumbria and south Cumbria/north Lancashire results in
BBC Radio Cumbria
beginning broadcasting on DAB. Consequently, for the first time, all 39 Local BBC Radio stations now broadcast on DAB.
2022
31 October – Major cutbacks to BBC Local Radio are announced. Stations will only be local from 6am until 2pm on weekdays with all other programming, apart from live sport, being broadcast on neighbouring stations. The cuts will also see the return of a fully networked weeknight show, airing from 10pm.
[37]
There is significant opposition to these proposals, including from within Parliament when a group of 26 MPs representing constituencies in Yorkshire write to the BBC Director-General,
Tim Davie
, to express their concerns about the proposed cuts to BBC Local Radio.
[38]
2023
25 September – Regional programme sharing begins.
BBC Radio Bristol
,
BBC Radio Somerset
,
BBC Radio Gloucestershire
and
BBC Radio Wiltshire
become the first stations to begin sharing content.
[39]
The following months see regional programme sharing being rolled across all of England.
[40]
8 October – The first edition of the England-wide networked
BBC Local Radio
late night show is broadcast.
Becky Want
presents Sunday to Thursday and
Jo Good
hosts Fridays and Saturdays.
[41]
12 November – England-wide programming expands further when a new national programme, presented by
Dotun Adebayo
, launches. It broadcasts on all BBC Local Radio stations each Sunday between 6pm and 10pm, replacing regional and local programmes which had previous been aired on Sunday evenings.
[42]
See also
Timeline of BBC Radio London
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Related articles
Timeline of BBC Local Radio
Timeline of BBC Radio London
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